Nandan Nilekani has a BILLION likes in India, what’s next for him?
There are icons in India who have touched the lives of people with
their industrious nature. One of them was the legendary engineer Sir M
Visvesvaraya who built irrigation canals and dams, across the Indian
sub-continent, bringing water to millions of people.
Every generation has people who want to use their industry to change lives for the better. Nandan Nilekani, the former CEO and co-Founder of the $9.5 billion Infosys, is one such man. He left Infosys in 2008 to build the largest database that the world has ever known. Called the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), it is a common platform on which each citizen can be identified by the government through a 12-digit unique identity number to provide subsidies.
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Today, over 1 billion Indians have registered. Each registered citizen carries their biometric and demographic information in a card that ensures they avail government subsidies without any graft. In an interview with YourStory, Nandan Nilekani said that there are challenges in India, which are also opportunities for progress. He says startups should focus on leadership and design thinking. Here are some excerpts.
There are very few who compare with Sir M Visvesvaraya. How does it feel to touch the lives of a billion people?
I am moved by the statement, but in no way am I in the same league as Sir Visvesvaraya. What he did in his era was phenomenal. It was much larger than what I have achieved. UIDAI achieved 1 billion registrations because of technology and it scaled up rapidly. Technology made this easy.
Engineers of that era moved mountains to get things done with politicians and industry; they moved policy in their direction. What was your experience when you took over the UID project?
I had written about the need for a UID number in my book Reimagining India. The government was working on such a project in parallel. They invited me to join. It was a major challenge because I had to convince so many people about its merits. I met the Chief Ministers of every State, the banks, the oil and gas companies, the fertiliser companies and device vendors to evangelise the Aadhaar concept. It took me about fourteen months to spread the idea. I set up the technology team in Bangalore, like a startup, in 2009, and Delhi was the administrative office. Ram Sewak Sharma, a Jharkhand Cadre IAS office of the 1978 batch, joined me in the journey and helped run the project. We deliberately kept the tech team in Bangalore and kept them away from the politics of Delhi. Obviously, the engineering talent was in Bangalore and we knew that the technology had to be our strength if this project had to succeed. The first Aadhaar number was issued on September 29, 2010. It was in Nadurgaon in Maharashtra.
What can startups learn from your stint at Infosys and UID?
When we started Infosys, there were not many people who could become entrepreneurs. There was no exposure to the world around you. You should build businesses that last and are able to scale. It can be in the consumer business too. Startups today have access to capital and mentoring. But they need to have a design as to what they want to achieve. By design, I mean it is about their objectives for technology and business, which will also answer the question of scaling. I mentor many startups on leadership, design thinking, organisational value, and scale. Remember that not all startups will succeed. That said, innovation will be driven by small companies. The generation today are digital and their ability to change industry will be faster than what was achieved previously. Startups must remember that it is an era of building platforms (on which technology services are built) and not pipes.
A lot of expats worked in the UID project. Can you tell us more about the team?
There were several volunteers; Raj Mashruwala and Sanjay Jain were among those who came from Silicon Valley. It was a great team. The team comprised the best technologists from the US and India. They built an entire technology stack, ground up, in a matter of months. The database is hosted in 1000s of servers in two locations. It is by far the largest biometric database by order of ten. I think, at one level, everyone got the point that this platform could empower people. We started building the stack around delivering services on the mobile and were open to collaborations with startups. Iris and finger print authentication will change the way money is transferred through mobile phones. The Aadhaar numbers will be linked to these forms of authentication, which will again change systems by a factor of ten. The entire system was designed around open APIs and allows startups and companies to build on top of the platform. Apps are the future of delivering services and innovation is coming from startups. The UID program is a completely built for innovation to deliver social services.
Every generation has people who want to use their industry to change lives for the better. Nandan Nilekani, the former CEO and co-Founder of the $9.5 billion Infosys, is one such man. He left Infosys in 2008 to build the largest database that the world has ever known. Called the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), it is a common platform on which each citizen can be identified by the government through a 12-digit unique identity number to provide subsidies.
Today, over 1 billion Indians have registered. Each registered citizen carries their biometric and demographic information in a card that ensures they avail government subsidies without any graft. In an interview with YourStory, Nandan Nilekani said that there are challenges in India, which are also opportunities for progress. He says startups should focus on leadership and design thinking. Here are some excerpts.
There are very few who compare with Sir M Visvesvaraya. How does it feel to touch the lives of a billion people?
I am moved by the statement, but in no way am I in the same league as Sir Visvesvaraya. What he did in his era was phenomenal. It was much larger than what I have achieved. UIDAI achieved 1 billion registrations because of technology and it scaled up rapidly. Technology made this easy.
Engineers of that era moved mountains to get things done with politicians and industry; they moved policy in their direction. What was your experience when you took over the UID project?
I had written about the need for a UID number in my book Reimagining India. The government was working on such a project in parallel. They invited me to join. It was a major challenge because I had to convince so many people about its merits. I met the Chief Ministers of every State, the banks, the oil and gas companies, the fertiliser companies and device vendors to evangelise the Aadhaar concept. It took me about fourteen months to spread the idea. I set up the technology team in Bangalore, like a startup, in 2009, and Delhi was the administrative office. Ram Sewak Sharma, a Jharkhand Cadre IAS office of the 1978 batch, joined me in the journey and helped run the project. We deliberately kept the tech team in Bangalore and kept them away from the politics of Delhi. Obviously, the engineering talent was in Bangalore and we knew that the technology had to be our strength if this project had to succeed. The first Aadhaar number was issued on September 29, 2010. It was in Nadurgaon in Maharashtra.
What can startups learn from your stint at Infosys and UID?
When we started Infosys, there were not many people who could become entrepreneurs. There was no exposure to the world around you. You should build businesses that last and are able to scale. It can be in the consumer business too. Startups today have access to capital and mentoring. But they need to have a design as to what they want to achieve. By design, I mean it is about their objectives for technology and business, which will also answer the question of scaling. I mentor many startups on leadership, design thinking, organisational value, and scale. Remember that not all startups will succeed. That said, innovation will be driven by small companies. The generation today are digital and their ability to change industry will be faster than what was achieved previously. Startups must remember that it is an era of building platforms (on which technology services are built) and not pipes.
A lot of expats worked in the UID project. Can you tell us more about the team?
There were several volunteers; Raj Mashruwala and Sanjay Jain were among those who came from Silicon Valley. It was a great team. The team comprised the best technologists from the US and India. They built an entire technology stack, ground up, in a matter of months. The database is hosted in 1000s of servers in two locations. It is by far the largest biometric database by order of ten. I think, at one level, everyone got the point that this platform could empower people. We started building the stack around delivering services on the mobile and were open to collaborations with startups. Iris and finger print authentication will change the way money is transferred through mobile phones. The Aadhaar numbers will be linked to these forms of authentication, which will again change systems by a factor of ten. The entire system was designed around open APIs and allows startups and companies to build on top of the platform. Apps are the future of delivering services and innovation is coming from startups. The UID program is a completely built for innovation to deliver social services.
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